Is North Kingstown Going The Way Of Wisconsin?


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Has sticking it to public sector workers become such popular politics in Rhode Island that the North Kingstown Town Council is willing to risk more than a million dollars to do so? That’s what NK fire union president Ray Furtado is beginning to think after the Council was again admonished by Judge Brian Stern; in December he said the town violated the law when it demanded fire fighters work 24 hour shifts and then again today for not coming to a counter-agreement in time.

“It’s slowly becoming obvious that this isn’t about money,” Furtado said, comparing the situation to what Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker tried to do to organizer labor there. “It’s about management rights and hurting public sector workers.”

Another sign it isn’t about the money: the town has hired infamous anti-labor lawyer Dan Kinder, who has a reputation for winning but also for sometimes costing clients more than he saved them.

In 2012, the town tried to force the fire fighters to work 24-hour shifts and 56 hours in one work week. The new schedule would have meant an additional 728 hours a year for fire fighters along with an average $5 an hour pay cut.

Judge Brian Stern in December ruled the new hours violated labor law and gave the two sides 30 days to negotiate.

Which they did. They even agreed to a tentative agreement last week. But on Saturday the Council rejected the deal. On Monday, Stern gave the two sides until Wednesday to work it out.

The fire fighters are seeking $1.4 million in damages. NK could decide to appeal to the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

It’s the second high profile labor dispute North Kingstown has endured recently. This summer, it outsourced school custodians.

Broken Promises in NK

NKFFA Firefighters, family & friends Tunnel to Towers 2012

Negotiations between the Town of North Kingstown and its firefighters union, IAFF Local 1651 on Wednesday ended in a mutually agreed tentative agreement. Right?

After all, Wednesday’s ten hour session at the bargaining table resulted in a Tentative Agreement, dated and signed by Town Manager, Michael Embury and the union’s representative, President Raymond Furtado. Handshakes were made and the parties left negotiations with the agreement that both parties would take the agreement back to their organizations for ratification. Right?

On Friday evening, that’s just what the North Kingstown Firefighters Association (NKFFA) did. Firefighters, union leaders and members met to ratify the agreement, returning the town’s fire personnel to their previous shift structure as ordered by Superior Court Judge Brian J. Stern on December 14, 2012. After deliberating and consideration, the membership ratified a temporary agreement saving the town damages in excess of $1 million. The good faith effort by union personnel in ending the standoff was thwarted just a few hours later.

The town council, meeting on Saturday morning in executive session, flip flopped on that agreement, voting 5-0 not to ratify. Tentative agreements are clearly tentative in North Kingstown.

Town Manager, Michael Embury in press release noted that after calling for a motion to approve, council president Liz Dolan received no response. Motion was then made by Dolan’s fellow Republican Kerri McKay to “not approve” the tentative agreement and seconded by Democrat, Richard Welch. All members, including Carol Hueston, who sat in on negotiations, voted to not approve the contract.

The firefighters plan to return to court to seek entry of order under Judge Stern’s December decision.

What’s In A Name: RISC Meets Moderate Party


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There’s something refreshingly honest about Ken Block and RISC coming together to form the RI Taxpayers organization. They are both now coming clean and admitting in monicker who it is they are actually advocating for.

Say what you will about Ken Block’s policy proposals – and there some I like and many I don’t – but at least he is no longer trying to fool Rhode Islanders into thinking he stands for something other than what he does.

By and large, he stands for the group of people known as “taxpayers” – in politics this doesn’t mean people who pay taxes, it is code for people who want to pay less in taxes, which is usually made up mostly of people who (think they) don’t need government services. This constituency is also often referred to as “fiscal conservatives.”

Sam Bell recently pointed out in a comment on RI Future that oftentimes political party names don’t match their politics: “For instance, the Liberal Party of Australia is conservative, and so is the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan.  And the Socialist party of France is not very socialist.  Many members of Yisrael Beteinu (Israel is Our Home) actually live in the West Bank. Unless Mr. Block seriously pretends that he is not a conservative, there is no harm done.”

That’s where the rub was: Block wasn’t so much pretending his position was moderate as he was pretending that the progressive position didn’t exist. Bell went on the eviscerate Block on that point too which you can read here.

Similarly, by changing its name from the Rhode Island Statewide Coalition to RI Taxpayers, one of the charter members of the chorus of pseudo-think tanks that lobby for the rich and powerful in Rhode Island has also come clean with its actual agenda.

The Rhode Island Statewide Coalition was never a statewide coalition at all. In fact, quite the opposite. It started out being called the Rhode Island Shoreline Coalition and according to Progressive Charlestown was formed in 2003 to win “the vote for out-of-state land owners and fighting the Narragansetts over gaming.”

Will Collette, co-editor of Progressive Charlestown, published a two part investigation into RISC in August when it was moving out of Charlestown and to west Warwick. You can read it here and here.

People’s History: Happy Birthday Rosa Parks


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Happy 100th birthday to the “mother of the civil rights movement” Rosa Parks. She was born on this day in 1913.

Yasser Arafat was named chairman on the Palestinian Liberation Organization on this day in 1969. The PLO was first formed in 1964, prior to Israel taking the West Bank and Gaza from the Palestinian people, and it was Arafat who first pushed for a two-state solution. He died in 2004, and in November NPR and other other major news organizations looked into the theory that he was poisoned by Israel.

More than 20,000 freed American slaves arrive on the west coast of Africa today in 1822. They would eventually start the nation of Liberia.

Speaking of West Africans … today in 1999, New York City police officers shoot an unarmed Amadou Diallo 41 times.

Today in 1826, “The Last of the Mohicans”  is published … and, of course, James Fenimore Cooper may have spoken too soon … the Mohegan Tribe was first federally recognized in 1990 and now runs a $2 billion a year casino in eastern Connecticut called, of course, Mohegan Sun.

American hero Neal Cassady pulls his final prank today in 1968. He was never big on resting peacefully, so I’ll not wish it on him for eternity.

Pranksters in Brussels on this day in 1998 throw a pie in Bill Gates face. Dan Rather calls it a cowardly attack.

Founded today , 1944: the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals.

Senator Strom Thurmond sends a letter to the White House asking that John Lennon be deported today in 1972.

In 1974, Patti Hearst is kidnapped … two months later, she’s caught on tape robbing a San Francisco bank with her kidnappers.

And today in 1987, Dennis Conner gets his revenge for his loss in Newport in 1983.

RI Activist Helps Syrians Transition To Democracy


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Screenshot from g-chat with Josie Shagwert from Gaziantep, Turkey on Friday.

As a brutal revolution rages in Syria, the ancient city of Aleppo is the most deadly front in his civil-war and likely the most dangerous place in the world.

On Sunday, 16 people were reportedly killed when the government fired a missile at an apartment building (video here), and 79 executed bodies were pulled from a river there last week. The AP reports a former member of parliament and his family were killed by what the state news agency called “terrorists.”

In Saturday’s New York Times, under an Aleppo dateline, C.J. Chivers writes, “While Western governments have long worried that its self-declared leaders, many of whom operate from Turkey, cannot jell into a coherent movement with unifying leaders, the fighting across the country has been producing a crop of field commanders who stand to assume just these roles.”

But meanwhile, just an hour to the north of Aleppo, Josie Shagwert of Providence was in Gaziantep, Turkey, helping to ensure this doesn’t happen. She’s part of a grassroots effort to train non-violent Syrian activists how to implement a fair democracy after the Assad regime falls.

“I don’t think anyone knows what will happen after the regime falls,” she told me on Friday. “But everyone is fairly certain the regime will fall. It’s a horrible situation and we don’t know what will happen, but at some point we are going to have to rebuild.”

For the next five weeks, Shagwert will be working in Gaziantep with the Center for a Civil Society and Democracy in Syria. On Friday, as there was a suicide bombing at an American embassy in Ankura, Turkey, Shagwert was a mere five hours away helping with with a workshop for 25 Syrians from between the ages of 30 and 60 who traveled across the border to learn about transitional justice.

“Humanitarian relief work is really important, but CCSDS made a decision to focus on what is the future and what will the transition be like,” she said. “Believing in democracy is a lot easier than practicing it. We’re helping people unlearn the practices of an oppressive regime.”

Shagwert, who was raised in Providence and still lives in the Capital City, is well-versed in grassroots organizing. She recently left a job as the director of Fuerza Laboral/ Power of Workers, an “organization of immigrants and low-income workers who organize to end exploitation in the workplace” in Central Falls, according to its Facebook page.

She told me she has an “obsessive passion for democracy movements and resistance to authoritarianism in whatever form that takes.”

She’s no stranger to Syria, either. She lived in Damscus for about 6 months in 2010, and left just a month before uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt and, soon thereafter, in Syria, too. Her grandparents emigrated from Syria in the 1920’s to Rhode Island, and Shagwert grew up listening to them speak Arabic with their neighbors.

But she never understood the language until taking a class at a local church in Worcester, Mass. While studying there, she befriended a Syrian woman whose sister works with CCSDS. After Shagwert left her job with Fuerza Laboral, she began to plan her trip to Turkey to help.

“There’s so much focus on sectarianism and no one is really consulting with grassroots Syria,” she said. “We’re helping civil society activists. There are still people practicing non violence in Syria, which is incredibly brave in the face of so much violence and oppression.”

Shagwert will file dispatches with RI Future on her efforts and experiences in Gaziantep with CCSDS.

Super Bowl Ad Nixed, But For Wrong Reasons


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SodaStream manufactures devices to make carbonated beverages at home and the company intended to run an ad for their contraption during the Super Bowl. But apparently CBS turned them down because Coke-a-Cola and Pepsi objected to the competition.

(Update: A Sodastream ad did air during the game)

But SodaStream is not only a threat to Big Cola, it’s also made by an Israeli company in Mishor Adumim, part of an Israeli settlement on stolen Palestinian land in the West Bank. The international community (except perhaps the U.S. and Israel) recognizes these settlements as illegal.

Companies that operate in the settlements exploit Palestinian land, resources and labor.  They enjoy government support including tax incentives and lenient enforcement of regulations, while the taxes and profits go to support the Israeli economy.

You can learn more here.

American organizations asking people to boycott their products include Jewish Voice for Peace, United Methodist Kairos Response, CodePink, the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation and many others.

Poem: ‘Meditation On The Economy’


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John Kenneth Galbraith, were he here and breathing, would probably be biting his nails with worry. This week we learned that the economy contracted for the first time since 2009. In words reminiscent of what was said in the midst of the Great Depression, economic commentators have said it’s just a one off event in our ongoing recovery. Meanwhile, they crow about another 157,000 jobs added, ignoring that only 58% of the people in this country are employed. A year ago that rate was 57.9%. Clearly, it’s time for austerity.

Anyhow, here’s my poem this week, which as it happens I wrote back in 2009. It’s prose.

Meditation on the Economy

A crystalline calm is upon the ocean. The washed azure sky, without even the blemish of a cloud, speaks in the most fragile whispers about the proximity of beauty and death. The emerald water swallows with greedy equanimity both the heavy and light. The sun stretches down amber rays diffusing through the teeming life, down to fathomless twilight. Somewhere, black and unknowable is the bottom. Deeper and more quiet than the blackest dream, the ship is sinking. Strange sounds resonate from the hull, air trying to push its way out, the wood groaning in protest. Large pockets rise to the surface and burp erratically as the wreck shifts in the rolling currents of its descent.

It had gone quickly at the beginning. The weakness so long in atrophy relented to its fated failure in a crack of thunder. Instantaneously, the sea rushed gurgling and hungry into the lower compartments, sucking the ship down. At first, the air had freed itself in a multitude of voices, whistles, sighs, and whooshes. It was a song of physics and chaos.

Now, an eternity of moments and ten minutes later, only the stern remains above water, pointing accusingly skyward. The ship is sinking, slowly and remorselessly, a death that shudders nearer with each successive belch. The sinking is slower now but no less certain. In a panic that is so blind it is also silent, the crew and passengers are mostly frozen in denial. They cling to the idea it has stopped, that they can bob above the waves until the rescuers arrive. In reality, no aid is coming.

There aren’t lifeboats enough, and the self-important are claiming first right. These are the men in fine clothing and uniform; the captains of industry, the shipwrights, and the crewmen. Behold their fear, the dawning realization in their eyes that they aren’t in control. Their reasoning is that they will be better able to get and send help to those left behind. Sure, they were the ones that had brought them to this pass, so, too, they must be the ones who can find the way back. They offer this reasoning to the others in blue gel- cap cyanide placebos. They are saying ‘god bless you,’ and there are even tears in some of their eyes as they push off. They reason and excuse themselves from guilt. Cowardice, for naught.

The clarity of the ocean air, the sharpness of the light arcing through it, and the magical colors that they elicit; these perfections are not to be denied their finality. The falling inertia of the ship will draw the lifeboats down just as surely as the planet’s gravity draws the ship to its doom. It shall be a shared oblivion. The perfection; the fragile secret spoken by the breeze of beauty and death; no one is to speak of them.

Poem: Aiming Higher


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We shoot our rifles in the air

The bullets land we know not where

We load them up and aim again

A firing squad of seven men

Death camp near the Libyan border?

Drug lord scene from “Law & Order’?

No, it’s a place called Washington

Where nothing thrills quite like a gun

Saluting at the Inauguration

Twenty-one rounds in celebration

We shoot our rifles in the air

Then bow our heads and say a prayer

To those who heard that same salute

When some sick guy began to shoot

Innocent kids gunned down at school

Stop reminding us – it’s way too cruel.

 

 

‘Loving Story’ Marriage Equality Movie on Monday


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As the struggle for marriage equality in Rhode Island continues, and as the state Coalition Against Racial Profiling prepares for the reintroduction next week of its anti-racial profiling bill, the story of Mildred and Richard Loving is more timely than ever.

You can come watch the movie with the Rhode Island chapter of the ACLU Monday at 6:00 PM, in the RIC 
Student Union Ballroom. You can also watch the trailer here:

The Lovings were an interracial couple arrested for miscegenation in 1958 and exiled from Virginia. With the help of the ACLU, they took their case to the U.S. Supreme Court, which in 1967 – finally —  struck down these discriminatory laws across the nation.

Last September, the RI ACLU hosted a packed screening of “The Loving Story,” an award-winning HBO documentary about the case, at the Cable Car. On Monday, to kick off African-American history month, the ACLU and the Unity Center at Rhode Island College are planning to hold another free screening of this film at RIC to which the public is invited.

Tracing the history of the case, the film provides a compelling parallel to the contemporary issue of marriage equality, while also documenting the deep-seated nature of racial discrimination that still permeates our society.

We encourage you to attend, as it can only fuel the sense of urgency behind having 2013 finally be the year that the Rhode Island legislature both approves marriage equality for same-sex couples and enacts measures designed to reduce the unconscionable level of racial profiling that still exists on the streets and highways of Rhode Island.

Brown Professor Mark Blythe Explains Austerity


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“Austerity confuses virtue with vice,” says professor Mark Blyth, an international political economist at Brown University, who stars in this this video that it makes it really easy to understand why cutting back is bad for the economy as a whole.

The video was produced by the Watson Center for International Studies at Brown, of which Blythe is a fellow and he is working on a book with the working title: “Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea”

A couple of interesting remarks from the video that are useful for figuring out why auterity measures may sound like common sense when used as political talking points but really don’t stand in a more nuanced look at how the economy functions”

Make no mistake the problem is debt. There is too much of it across the board and we need to clean those public and those private balance sheets. But all these pieces are connected. If the public sector leans these balances sheets at the same time as the private sector. It’s called the fallacy of composition. What’s good for any one household and firm or state is a disaster if we all do it once.

So where does this common sense virtue of austerity leave us? It leaves us in a cycle where those at the bottom end of the income distribution pay for those at the top with the same stagnat nd skewed incomes that now buy less in a more unequal and unstable economy. There’s a term for this: class politics. And it usually ends badly.

Washington Post: Deborah Gist, Jeb Bush and ALEC


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Rhode Island Education Commissioner Deborah Gist has sought several reform-oriented grants through a group closely connected with ALEC, according to the Washington Post.

The Post reported Wednesday on the connection between Jeb Bush’s Chiefs for Change, a conservative education group of which Gist is a member, and the Foundation for Excellence in Education, which has “strong connections” with the American Legislative Exchange Council, the shadowy corporate-funded bill mill widely regarded as one of the strongest and shadiest right-wing forces in state politics.

According to the WaPost story :

A nonprofit group released thousands of e-mails today and said they show how a foundation begun by Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor and national education reform leader, is working with public officials in states to write education laws that could benefit some of its corporate funders.

The e-mails are between the Foundation for Excellence in Education (FEE) and a group Bush set up called Chiefs for Change, whose members are current and former state education commissioners who support Bush’s agenda of school reform, which includes school choice, online education … and school accountability systems based on standardized tests.

Gist is a member of Chiefs for Change, and the emails made public this week indicate she sought the FEE’s help in procuring funding for local initiatives. You can read Gist’s emails here.

From the WaPost story:

Donald Cohen, chair of the nonprofit In the Public Interest, a resource center on privatization and responsible for contracting in the public sector, said the e-mails show how education companies that have been known to contribute to the foundation are using the organization “to move an education agenda that may or not be  in our interests but are in theirs.”

He said companies ask the foundation to help state officials pass laws and regulations that make it easier to expand charter schools, require students to take online education courses, and do other things that could result in business and profits for them. The e-mails show, Cohen said, that Bush’s foundation would often do this with the help of Chiefs for Change and other affiliated groups.

The Post says, “There are strong connections between FEE and the conservative American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).” The Washington Post cites an analysis by the Center for Media and Democracy that detailed the connection:

Aptly named FEE, Bush’s group is backed by many of the same for-profit school corporations that have funded ALEC and vote as equals with its legislators on templates to change laws governing America’s public schools. FEE is also bankrolled by many of the same hard-right foundations bent on privatizing public schools that have funded ALEC. And, they have pushed many of the same changes to the law, which benefit their corporate benefactors and satisfy the free market fundamentalism of the billionaires whose tax-deductible charities underwrite the agenda of these two groups.

FEE and ALEC also have had some of the same “experts” as members or staff, part of the revolving door between right-wing groups. They have also collaborated on the annual ALEC education “report card” that grades states’ allegiance to their policy agenda higher than actual student performance. That distorted report card also rewards states that push ALEC’s beloved union-busting measures while giving low grades to states with students who actually perform best on standardized knowledge tests.

Gist’s emails were one of six from conservative state education leaders across the country. The others were Oklahoma, New Mexico, Maine, Louisiana and Florida.

In July, RI Future reported that ALEC’s next legislative push would be into public education.

Last year, RI Future broke several stories about ALEC’s influence at the State House. Following our coverage – which prompted many local media outlets to cover the issue and helped inspire a New York Times op/edseveral legislative members dropped out as did corporate member CVS. Several more ALEC members an supporters were defeated in November’s election, most notbably ALEC’s biggest booster locally Jon Brien.


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